The trailer for the Simpsons movie actually suggests that, despite the show having jumped the shark some time ago, the movie might actually be worth seeing. Caution: brief violence against extremely cute bunny.

You can find Richard Dawkins reading from "The God Delusion" at Randolph-Macon Woman's College here, including a Q&A session, as YouTube clips and a 113MB downloadable QuickTime file. The Q&A session was apparently notable for featuring several students from Jerry Falwell's nearby institution.

Oh, good grief.. loads more! ^_^ The "invisible bike" still remains amongst the best, I think, but there's always space for ceiling cat too. I might even print one or two of them out, if I had a printer.. tempting to get something cheap'n'cheerful, but inkjet cartridge costs scare me. :-P Any idea how much life you get out of them, vaguely? I probably wouldn't print that much in color, though the walls certainly could use some decoration - although the landlord apparently wants to inspect every two months - most would just be reference manuals (OpenGL, Objective C, etc) to pore over without drawing on the battery. A basic laser would probably be the best choice for text, but that's extra cost to begin with.

Mm, I'm very reluctant to go with anything inkjet, simply for the cost of the cartridges. Ideally, of course, I'd go for a color laser - they've come right down in price, but obviously, not as dirt cheap as inkjets.

One office had a nice wide format printer.. I wound up printing about six posters on that. ^_^ Not one of the gigantic print shop units, but 24" wide, paper on long rolls, so something like a comic cover could come out to a very cool size indeed. Would that those were vaguely affordable for the home market! :-9

Hmm. I did have an old NeXT printer, but I think it was missing something like the paper tray - I could see that costing as much as a new printer, out of collectible value. :-P Plus there's the matter of that being in storage, if I even still have it - think I might've jettisoned it along the way. Nice looking unit, too, and worked well, though it did require a NeXT to drive it, as it relied on the host for its PostScript processing. (Not a problem, as I have one or two in storage =:)